War essays ideas

Briefly state your position, state why the problem you are working on is important, and indicate the important questions that need to be answered; this is your "Introduction." Push quickly through this draft--don't worry about spelling, don't search for exactly the right word, don't hassle yourself with grammar, don't worry overmuch about sequence--that's why this is called a "rough draft." Deal with these during your revisions. The point of a rough draft is to get your ideas on paper. Once they are there, you can deal with the superficial (though very important) problems.

This opaqueness of diplomacy was arguably one of the main
factors that led Germany to make such aggressive moves early in
the war, as many German leaders believed that Britain would never enter
the war against them. Russia likewise pursued a number of secret
treaties and agreements both before and during the war. Italy even
went so far as to shop around secretly when trying to decide which
side offered the greatest potential benefits. Ultimately, these secret
diplomatic maneuverings escalated the war to catastrophic levels.
As a result, one of President Wilson’s Fourteen Points policy was
that henceforth, all treaties and trade agreements between nations
be held with full public disclosure.

Reviews were generally positive and a respectable amount of volumes were sold, but it did not become a bestseller until an edition was published in England. By 1896 the novel had gone through nine editions and Crane himself realized he was no longer "a black sheep but a star." A reviewer in the New York Press wrote "one should be forever slow in charging an author with genius, but it must be confessed that The Red Badge of Courage is open to the suspicion of having greater power and originality that can be girdled by the name of talent." Joseph Conrad, the famous author of Heart of Darkness (1899), wrote that Crane had written "a spontaneous piece of work which seems to spurt and flow like a tapped stream from the depths of the writer's being." Some critics, including the writer Ambrose Bierce, attacked the novel for, among other things, being too imaginative, depicting soldiers poorly, and lacking in a coherent plot and grammatical/syntactical purity.